New York Post

REVEALED! TRUE ALIEN STORIES

Pull back the blanket on ‘E.T.,’ the magical ’80s megahit

- By SARA STEWART

TODAY, “E.T. the Extra-Terrestria­l” turns 40. But the iconic alien doesn’t look a day over 10 million — his approximat­e age in a novelizati­on of the 1982 film.

Steven Spielberg’s family drama, in which a young boy named Elliott (Henry Thomas) finds a lost alien in his yard, was an instant classic. It made “E.T. phone home” one of the most enduring catchphras­es in all of cinema; it anointed Reese’s Pieces the It candy of the decade. It also introduced the world to 6-yearold Drew Barrymore, who played Elliott’s adorable baby sister Gertie.

The movie ran in theaters for an unheard-of full year, until June 1983.

Check out these insider facts about Spielberg’s epic childhood drama, then give it a rewatch: We dare you not to cry.

The concept for ‘E.T.’ started out much darker

When Spielberg began to think about doing an alien-themed follow-up to his 1977 movie “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” he enlisted writer-director John Sayles to pen a screenplay called “Night Skies,” in which a farm community was terrorized by alien invaders. As the Guardian reported, “the tone of ‘Night Skies’ was set for horror and violence.” Fortunatel­y, the director had a change of heart.

Nine-year-old Henry Thomas crushed his audition

Henry Thomas, who had already had one role in the Sissy Spacek drama “Raggedy Man,” did an improvised audition with Spielberg in which he cried while pleading with a government agent not to take E.T. “The improvisat­ion was so heartfelt and honest that I gave him the part right there,” Spielberg has said.

Ralph Macchio was almost in the movie

“Cobra Kai” star Ralph Macchio told People he had an opportunit­y to play Tyler, one of Elliott’s older brother’s friends. “C. Thomas Howell — my ‘Outsiders’ greaser buddy, Ponyboy — actually played that part,” he said in an interview on Drew Barrymore’s talk show. It was Howell’s film debut; “The Outsiders” came out the next year.

Spielberg drew on famous faces for his alien hero

In the special “The Making of E.T. the Extra-Terrestria­l,” the director shared that he wanted E.T.’s face to evoke several legends. “I remember saying to [special effects artist] Carlo [Rambaldi], here’s some pictures of Albert Einstein, Ernest Hemingway and Carl Sandburg. I love their eyes, can we make E.T.’s eyes as frivolous and also wizened and as sad as those three icons?”

The surprising sources that inspired special effects artist Ben Burtt to create E.T.’s voice

“There are raccoons in there, there are sea otters, there are some horses,

there’s a burp from my old cinema professor from USC,” Ben Burtt told the BBC. “There’s my wife’s labored breathing asleep at night with a cold.” The main voice came from actress Pat Welsh, who, according to IMDb.com, took home just $380 for her role.

Harrison Ford shot a scene that got cut

Harrison Ford was dating “E.T.” screenwrit­er Melissa Mathison at the time — and had just shot Spielberg’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” He shot a cameo as the school principal, admonishin­g Elliott for setting dissection­bound frogs free. The scene was cut but, as Spielberg has said, “that’s where [Henry] got a chance to meet Harrison.”

An actor without legs gave E.T. his signature walk

In many scenes, E.T. is controlled by puppeteers. But Matthew De Meritt was 11 when he was hired to be inside the costume in the scene in which E.T. raids the refrigerat­or; born without legs, he walked on his hands, which gave the alien a unique waddle.

Spielberg gave multiple hat tips to ‘Star Wars’

The director had fun giving shoutouts to the work of his friend George Lucas. In one scene, Elliott shows E.T. his “Star Wars” action figures; in another, his older brother Michael (Robert McNaughton) puts on a Yoda voice. And in the Halloween sequence, in which the brothers throw a sheet over E.T. to smuggle him out into the woods, they see a trick-ortreater in a Yoda mask.

The doctors in the movie are really doctors

For the frightenin­g sequence in which the house is taken over by scientists and medical teams, Spielberg enlisted real doctors to play the roles: “The entire team of doctors that was working on E.T. were real emergency room doctors and various specialist­s from around California, and that was entirely improvised. He just wanted them to do it like a real code blue situation,” McNaughton said.

Spielberg digitally erased guns in one version

As Elliott and E.T. are being chased by the feds, there’s a rifle-toting FBI agent among their ranks. In a rerelease, the director replaced the gun with a less menacing walkie-talkie. He’s said he got a lot of negative feedback about revising the film: “I learned a big lesson and that’s the last time I decided to ever mess with the past.”

Spielberg was accused of plagiarism

Indian author Satyajit Ray believed the concept for “E.T.” was strikingly similar to a script he’d written in the 1960s called “The Alien,” about “an alien landing in a village in Bengal and becoming friends with a boy.” Ray was tipped off by American science-fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, after Clarke saw a screening of Spielberg’s movie. Spielberg denied the allegation­s, and ultimately Ray decided not to pursue legal action.

John Williams’ score made the film operatic

The director has said the emotional ending of “E.T.” was “as close to an opera . . . as anything I’ve ever done before in my life” due to the musical stylings of John Williams, a longtime Spielberg, and Lucas, collaborat­or.

The ‘E.T.’ Atari video game was legendaril­y bad

Shortly after the movie came out, a game was developed for the Atari 2600 system. Turnaround time for a game was usually several months, but this one was churned out in five weeks — and it showed. Looper.com noted, “Reviewers from the era found the game confusing, clunky and hard to learn, with bad graphics even for the time. Apparently, children had an easier time playing than adults, but people did not like constantly falling into pits.”

There could have been a disturbing sequel

Spielberg reunited with screenwrit­er Mathison for a treatment for “E.T. 2: Nocturnal Fears,” in which E.T. would return to earth amid an invasion of aliens who “were carnivorou­s and emitted a ‘hypnotic hum’ with paralyzing effects on the surroundin­g wildlife.” Ultimately, the director wisely concluded this might tarnish the original film’s legacy.

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 ?? ?? ALL GROWN UP: Steven Spielberg with former child stars Drew Barrymore (Gertie) and Henry Thomas (Elliott) in 2002.
ALL GROWN UP: Steven Spielberg with former child stars Drew Barrymore (Gertie) and Henry Thomas (Elliott) in 2002.
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 ?? Universal Studios Amblin Entertainm­ent; Getty Images; AP ??
Universal Studios Amblin Entertainm­ent; Getty Images; AP
 ?? ?? A CLOSER LOOK: From Steven Spielberg’s dark original vision to the disastrous video game tie-in, one of the most successful films of the 1980s has a lengthy
— and often entertaini­ng — backstory.
A CLOSER LOOK: From Steven Spielberg’s dark original vision to the disastrous video game tie-in, one of the most successful films of the 1980s has a lengthy — and often entertaini­ng — backstory.

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